Marine Drugs (Feb 2012)

Toxicity of Cultured Bullseye Puffer Fish Sphoeroides annulatus

  • Jose L. Ochoa,
  • Isabel Abdo de la Parra,
  • Lilia Ibarra-Martinez,
  • Angel I. Campa-Cordova,
  • Alejandra Heredia-Tapia,
  • Erick J. Nuñez-Vazquez,
  • Armando Garcia-Ortega

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/md10020329
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
pp. 329 – 339

Abstract

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The toxin content in various life cycle stages of tank-cultivated bullseye puffer (Sphoeroides annulatus) were analyzed by mouse bioassay and ESI-MS spectrometry analysis. The presence of toxin content was determined in extracts of sperm, eggs, embryo, larvae, post-larvae, juvenile, pre-adult, and adult fish, as well as in food items used during the cultivation of the species. Our findings show that only the muscle of juveniles, the viscera of pre-adults, and muscle, liver, and gonad of adult specimens were slightly toxic ( < 1 mouse unit). Thus, cultivated S. annulatus, as occurs with other cultivated puffer fish species, does not represent a food safety risk to consumers. This is the first report of toxin analysis covering the complete life stages of a puffer fish under controlled conditions.

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